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A43515 A century of sermons upon several remarkable subjects preached by the Right Reverend Father in God, John Hacket, late Lord Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry ; published by Thomas Plume ... Hacket, John, 1592-1670.; Plume, Thomas, 1630-1704. 1675 (1675) Wing H169; ESTC R315 1,764,963 1,090

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hands Defiled hands in the original are common hands for whatsoever was commonly touched by them and the Gentiles they called it defiled and in suspicion they might touch meat or vessels or apparel which was unclean by the Law they washed often to purge themselves from that defilement This is well illustrated Joh. ii where we read that at the marriage in Cana of Galilee there were ready standing six water-pots of stone after the manner of the purifying of the Jews containing two or three Firkins a piece these have reference to that Pharisaical tradition of washing often lest they should be defiled Now mark how God observes both the heathen and the Pharisees in their own weakness and out of that which they made a vain tradition he makes a gracious Sacrament A good Author cites out of the Rabbins that the Jews had added over and above Moses his institution of the Passeover first these words in eating the sower herbs with the Lamb Take and eat these in remembrance of our deliverance from bondage And likewise they gave a cup of Wine one to another with these words Take and drink this in remembrance of the same c. And from hence according to a Custom of their own our Saviour did break bread and give wine and use the same words in his holy Supper Thus both the Sacraments to please them the better had their original from some of their own Ordinances but cast in a new mold so the heathen Temples were changed to be houses of Prayer The Cross which was no better than their Gallows is made a significant and laudable Ceremony in Christian Baptism And lastly Their superstitious bathings were turn'd by John and confirm'd by Christ to be an immortal Laver. This I hope satisfies the first question how this Institution of Baptism began being never heard of untill the days of John The dignity of Johns Baptism is now to be examined It is grown like many things more to be full of difficulty because of mens contentions and without discussion of these three things it cannot be understood 1 What is the vertue of a Sacrament 2. That Johns Baptism had the same substantial vertue with the Baptism of Christ that it now hath 3. That in some respects both Baptisms being one and the same the Baptism of Christ doth exceed the Baptism of John Sacraments are thus distinguished into such as went before the fall of Adam and such as went after Before the Fall there was one Sacrament and no more that was the Tree of Life ordained to be a sign of the Covenant of Works After the Fall God did not make a Covenant of Works but of Grace with man and ever since the Sacraments are Covenants of Grace and seals of the same And they of the Old Testament betoken the Covenant promised to our Fore-fathers they of the New Testament do imply the Covenant performed Let me distinguish again that in the Old Testament all the Sacrifices and a great part of the shadows and Types are sometimes in the Fathers called Sacraments because they had a signification of Christ to come but Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb they only had the Promise of Grace and Reconciliation annexed unto them which is a great deal more than bare signification And as St. Paul speaks honourably of Circumcision that it was a Seal of the righteousness of Faith so our Church thinks it not fit to speak contemptibly of the faith of the righteous men under the Law nor of those visible signs which God appointed to establish his Promise unto them but we make them equal in efficacy with Baptism and the Lords Supper That according as their faith did apply the Promise unto them their Sacraments were as profitable for Salvation as ours Only these are Circumstantial differences 1. That our Sacraments are meerly spiritual which betoken nothing of this world The Jews Sacraments had somewhat in them both which belong'd to the body as well as to the soul for Abraham received the sign of Circumcision that he should be the Father of many Nations and the Paschal Lamb was a remembrance that they came out of Egypt out of the house of bondage 2. As the light of Faith is brighter with us the measure of the Spirit more abundant so our Sacraments are justly said to to be Virtute majora more efficacious because we are endued with better means of application 3. Our Sacraments are actu faciliora to wash and be clean and to eat bread and drink wine are performed with more facility than the cutting the foreskin of Infants or the slaying of a Lamb to eat it with sower herbs 4. Take all the Types and Sacrifices of the Jews together which were an heavy burden because of their multitude then our Sacraments are numero pauciora we have but twain and so their number is not troublesom These are accidental differences but otherwise as St. Austin said of Manna that it was to them as the Lords Supper is to us In signis diversis fides eadem the Elements were divers but such as begot the same faith and are tokens of the same Lord Jesus Christ and beget the same Salvation That which thwarts this Doctrine is the distinction of the Schoolmen that the Sacraments ordained in Moses Law were significancies of Grace but the Sacraments of Christ did exhibit and confer Grace What means that Surely he that did eat the Paschal Lamb by faith to him it was spiritual nourishment and he that eats the Lords Supper to him only it is spiritual nourishment I can see no odds The late Romish Writers disclaim their gross opinion maintained long ago that in men capable of reason and knowledge for we set Infants aside the taking of the Sacrament should add a benefit to the Receiver Ex opere operato externo sine motu interno says Biel by the meer outward act without an inward preparation This opinion their Cardinal Controverser disavows for he that eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks his own damnation Then if Faith be requisite in the Participant I cannot see how one Sacrament exhibits Grace more than another It is far from my meaning to diminish the excellency and vertue of our Sacraments No I had rather set all disputations aside and say with St. Austin Quorum vis inenarrabiliter valet plurimum that is their power prevails in such a sort as we cannot utter how it is Yet this may be safely taught that they are not helping and partial causes of Salvation to be joyned in office with the merit of Christ but only Instruments ordained to work Salvation by the Promise of God and the application of a lively faith Origens words express much if I could explain them Non sunt justitiae sed conditurae justitiarum The Sacraments are not our righteousness but as sauce makes meat fit to be eaten so they make righteousness fit to be put upon us The Word preacht is the power
to favour the weakness of Infants we cast no more than a dew of water upon their face yet when young men converted from heathen Idolatry required the Baptism of the Church their whole body waded into the River even as they that came to John stood up to the neck in Jordan yea and in hotter countries Infants were dipt into the bottom of the Font this the Fathers called a resemblance that the old Adam was buried in the waters St. Paul makes it a mystery that we are buried with Christ therefore I find that some were wont especially to baptize on the Satterday wherein Christ lay in the Grave and a threefold immersion of the Child into the water was an usual Ceremony because Christ lay buried three days in the Sepulchre After the representation of burial in the outward Element the good use of that Sacrament tells us we should die unto sin I say first buried and then die for the end of being buried with Christ is that we should die daily unto sin This order is no hard thing to conceive for suppose a man by mischance sunk into the bottom of the water before he loseth his life and dies it is true to say that he is buried in the stream which is gone over his head therefore upon this burial-resembling baptism it behoves you to die unto the world and to mortifie your members upon earth The death of sin is thus to be conceived not an utter privation of all evil but a beating down of concupiscence it is a death to your Adversary the Devil when he cannot reign in your mortal body Weeds which are cut down perhaps will grow no more but their savour still stinks upon your dunghil So you may sheare down the viciousness of your life like an unprofitable weed lay it dead and let it grow no more but it will ever leave a noisom smell in our nature While we live in this world flesh is but a dunghil of corruption it made St. Paul have a great desire to be dissolved that he might be a sweet savour in Christ As we are buried and die with Christ in Baptism so we must rise with him through the faith of the operation of God Col. ii 12. For when Christ is given to us to be our life to what end should we die as it were with him in the Laver of new birth unless it be to rise up in a new life This meditation cannot choose but stick by you if you will always carry the remembrance of those words before your eyes Abrenuntio Satanae I renounce the Devil and all his works They are a part of your Indenture that you made with God and how will you answer the violating of your Covenant St. Ambrose declames thus upon it Tenetur vox tua non in tumulo mortuorum sed in libro viventium Praesentibus Angelis locutus es non est fallere non est mentiri This word is recorded not among the dead but in the book of the living The Angels were present in the Church when the Sureties in your name gave their faith to God therefore hold you to your word you must not falter you must not lie unto the Lord. Walk in newness of life that Phrase hath somewhat in it that is not said barely in a new life In novis vivendi formis let there be no kind of likeness and conformity to thy self as once thou wert a neglecter of Prayer a Traducer a Fornicator a Drunkard an Oppressor Here is a Temple built up new unto the Holy Ghost which once was a den of uncleanness that which is to come of my life is altogether consecrated to the glory of my Saviour look not therefore before me now but get thee behind me Satan You have now heard all the five Reasons upon the second part of the Text why Christ was baptized I said in the third place it was but a preparatory to greater matters which should follow therefore he went up straightway out of the water The Text says straightway as who should say he staid not long upon that Circumstance no more will we 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he did ascend out of Jordan and very presently both these are the crums of the Text and they must not be lost Literally it imports that Christ stood not upon the shore having a few drops of water cast upon him but he went with his whole body into the River to intimate that if God should not help the deep waters of our sins would take us up to the neck and the stream had gone over our soul So Philip and the Eunuch went down into the waters Acts viii 38. That great Courtier of Queen Candace stript himself of all his cloaths before his servants that he might wash from head to foot What was it to him to be naked in the sight of divers men He was so ashamed of his sins that he forgot all other shamefac'dness Thus he press'd close to the example of our Saviour who went down into the stream of Jordan and it being not the time of harvest when that River used to fill his banks he went up and ascended from the Pool St. Austin allegorizeth Confestim ascendit ut ostendat quàm gravi onere in baptismo liberamur He went up nimbly to the banks to shew that by Baptism we are lightned of the great burden of our sins and fit to ascend unto our Father Others fasten this observation upon it that Christ went straightway out of the water For his Baptism was done with more speed and expedition than the common peoples the reason is this Among the multitude every one was baptized confessing their sins that took up some time to detain them before they parted Christ staid for no more than the sprinkling of the River who had no sins to confess and straightway went out of the water St. Luke affords a pious conjecture Luk. iii. 21. being baptized he prayed Therefore to teach us with what reverence these great mysteries are to be entertained he made hast incontinently to the shore to fall upon his knees and pray unto his Father Adoremus coram creatore says the Psalmist O come let us worship and fall down and kneel before the Lord our maker If we are to worship him even as low as with the most humble prostration of our face upon the earth because he created us and gave us the life of nature then what knee can be so refractory as not to worship and fall down when we celebrate his infinite goodness in either of the Sacraments that he hath redeemed us from eternal death called us to the participation of grace and given us assurance in those blessed Seals of his Covenant that we shall enjoy the life of glory Remember what I said in the beginning beware of obstinacy Lastly He went up out of the waters to shew us every good deed is a step into another Do but enter into the practice of one good action and
is best fulfilled O could we but see the revelation of that glory with Stephen the Martyr though every Devil in hell stood round about threatning a Milstone to cast at your head you would not so much as turn your eyes for a moment from that heavenly Vision to save your life It were endless to fall upon this discourse As a stone cast into a fountain multiplies Circles in the water and the last is the greatest So every Circle of Heaven would give a new Apparition of glory but the last is greater than my tongue can utter Let it suffice us to know that in the greatest scorn of the faithful and when envy reproacheth their good name that there is a blessing laid up that we may believe against hope this Promise in my Text Them that Honour me I will Honour And now I am come to the third general Member which is the Covenant or Composition God must be Honoured I began there man would be Honoured I ended there but reason good if Man would have a free gift that God should have his due Honor propter Deum Honour for honour it is the highest step in my Text and an eternal Covenant Now you shall see every bone come to his bone every part of my Text come to his part which will in some sort revive that which hath been spoken First I told you God had a Name to be sanctified and so the Children of Men desire the blessing of a good name in their memory there is one pair to kiss each other Secondly God hath his Magistrates and Vicegerents to be obeyed and such Honour as they have it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the end of a civil life says Aristotle there is another couple if ye can joyn them luckily Thirdly God hath instituted holy and religious Sacraments the Seals of his Kingdom of grace and use them well for the Seales of the Kingdom of Grace are our Patents for the Kingdom of Glory Thus you see in every point the glory of God doth reflect glory upon Man Let them meet and clap their hands together There are some that would part stakes and give God some Honour but keep back a portion to themselves So the Pharisees were as cleanly in committing sin as in washing their hands often and God should have long Prayers so themselves might be praised for praying this is to divide with Ananias and Saphira but beware of the portion of Hypocrites Some are so intent to their own Honour that they quite forget God Let us get us a name say they that builded Babel Nobis non Domino a name for our selves and not for God and then we see what follows their Language was so confounded that no man could call another by his name and so they parted Thus it was Herods death to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eaten up of Worms but his first ruine was to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eaten up of Flatterers those that shouted in applause of his Eloquence when he made his own funeral Oration and gave not God the glory Bernard says that glory in this life is like the word of Christ spoke to Mary Magdalen Noli me tangere Touch me not as yet I am not ascended to my Father when I am translated into that Kingdom to see my Father then shall I also abound with Glory But Glory what art thou to me in this life Touch me not I am not ascended to my Father If the Devil tempt us to usurp upon that Honour which is due unto God answer as Joseph did to the Tentation of his Mistris Gen. 39. Behold my Master my good God hath put all things into my hand there is nothing that he hath not committed and delivered unto me beside thee that art his glory How shall I do this evil then to take thee unto my self I mean his glory which art as it were the Wife in his bosom When David in Psalm cxiv had described the manner of Gods deliverance of the Children of Israel from Captivity that the Mountains skipt like Rams and the little Hills like young Sheep In the beginning of Psalm cxv he sings this Song Non nobis Domine non nobis Not unto us Lord not unto us but unto thy name give the glory Not unto us not unto us Why is it twice repeated That is says one neither to Jew nor Gentile neither to the Jew that observes the Law nor to the Gentile that believes the Gospel Whether you be a doer of the Law or a repentant sinner Not unto us Lord not unto us Nay it is strange which follows but unto thy name give the glory What should he give glory unto himself Or should we do it No he did not say I will give glory unto thy Name that had been an arrogancy as if his free will could have done it but unto thy name give the glory Da Domine quod jubes jube quod vis Give me grace to glorifie thee and then unto thy name I will give the glory Now then if Gods grace do enable us to give him Honour the Honour which he repaies again is a reward of mercy and not of justice Propter promissum non propter debitum out of the promise of his goodness not out of the valour and merit of our goodness You know in temporal estates every man that Honours the King must not expect honour again but peace and justice under his protection It is true But this is the royalty of our Christian calling Honour is requited with Honour Ask and it shall be given you says Christ It What shall be given you Says St. Austin Non dicit quid dabitur quia est nomen super omne nomen desiderare nostrum non est terminus bonitatis Dei It is a gift far greater than we can ask or think and yet shall we have Honour for Honour But suppose we could pick out in all our life a deed of Charity a penitent Tear or a Prayer which we could call good Recte facti fecisse merces est A good deed is rewarded in that our conscience can say we did it and yet shall we have Honour for Honour But alas what is our righteousness As vile as the most polluted cloath that is dipt in bloud One said of the Infants of Bethlem that Martyrdom was a great Crown to be put upon so small an head as an Infants was Remondus ridet in parvâ magna corona comâ But if the malice and treachery of our heads were considered they are more unfit to were the Crown of life than the head of an Infant and yet to doubt it no more we shall have Honour for Honour But you will say wherewith shall we honour God With the heart by desiring him with the mouth by confessing him with the hand with the plenty of your Substance by enriching Gods portion You are faln upon an Age where there is more large occasion to Honour God with your ability than in
as his sins let him look upon this Pillar and mark that it is a Monument erected against a relapsing convert against one that was turning from the vain pomp of the World and did not persevere For she that fled from Sodom and lookt back perished as well as they that never came out And he that will consider what an heinous crime it is to be invited unto mercy and abuse it let him taste of this salt and feel what a strange judgment remains in this example to cast away that which God would have saved All this is tacitly included in the words which I have read unto you and as the Prophets of old uttered their Prophetical spirit many times by deeds and gestures as well as by word and speech So God doth teach his Church as well by fact as by precept Those Exhortations I premised were not doctrinally delivered at the castigation of Lot's Wife but miraculously exhibited in a visible work objectivè non praeceptivè they are not passed over in a line or two by the Pen of a ready Writer but built up for all posterity to look upon in a durable Monument And when judgment advanceth it self in a Trophy in a standing Pillar every man will conceive that it is meant it should be a monitory to all succession rather than if it were a fluxive a transitory penalty that left no print behind it The Idol Calf which the Israelites worshipped was beaten to powder the dust of it blown away before the wind and drunk up in the River The Sea which had given back on either side for the passage of Gods Host met together and overwhelmed Pharaoh and his Army in the bottom that they were no more seen The Earth clave and opened it self to swallow up Korah Dathan and Abiram and it closed again so that no appearance of them remained Nothing was found of Jezebel eaten up of dogs but her skull her feet and the palms of her hands So it pleased him who sits on high that all visible memorial of these sinners should be rid out of the way But He made brine of Lot's Wife and congealed it into a Statue where it stood longafter nay I cannot convince those reporters who have written that the reliques of it are to be seen to this day that passengers might shake their heads at it and say Ah thou that wert pluckt out of Sodom like a brand out of the fire and yet didst loiter by the way and couldst not refrain to cast back a wishing and a voluptuous eye upon those filthy habitations Ingenious fancies have taken scope to riddle upon this judgment Cadaver nec habet suum sepulchrum sepulchrum nec habet suum cadaver sepulchrum tamen cadaver intus that she was a dead corps that had no sepulcher and that she was a sepulcher that had no dead corps and yet it was both corps and sepulcher This gives me the hint to divide my Text into an Epitaph and a Tomb the Epitaph His wife looked back from behind him the Tomb which that Epitaph respects is that she became a pillar of salt If you will have it in Logical terms which come all to one pass thus here are two principal heads to which all the matter is to be referred qua fecit quae passa est first what she did and that 's the summary Enditement of her sin secondly what she suffered and that 's the sentence of her punishment I bind my self to the first part only at this time in which there is cumulus salis as many corns of salt as will lie upon a knifs point so in these few words she looked back from behind him many Commandments are broken 1. She was inobsequens she looked back being expresly forbidden there 's disobedience 2. Excors here 's blindness of heart she might have saved her self by going streight on and looking forward yet she violated those easie conditions 3. I●docilis she looked back from behind him Lot was a good example that went before her and she would go her own ways 4. Incredula she doubted whether those Cities should be destroyed as God had sent word or she thought it would not be the worse for her though she stood still and gazed upon Sodom 5. Recidiva she fainted in well doing and had a desire growing upon her to live again among those filthy sinners whom she had escaped 6. Misericordiae contemtrix she was slow to save her self and did not fly away upon the wings of mercy 7. Beneficii pertaesa she rather valued what she had lost than what she had saved her Habitation her Estate and Riches were consumed for her lifes preservation she set little by that and so loathed the benefit The Angel speaks in the 17. verse of this Chapter Escape for thy life look not behind thee neither stay thou in all the Plain yet she would not hearken no not to such a Monitor as an Angel but she looked back from behind him and so stands guilty of disobedience For disobedience is a sin by it self alone Cum crimen potius contra prohibitionem quàm contra rem ipsam fiat says the School when the fact it self were innocent but that the prohibition of the Lawgiver makes it nocent There are some Commandments of Gods which lean not so much upon apparent reason as upon absolute authority For though there be weighty causes which moved the most wise God to appoint it so yet when those reasons are not emergent out of the seeds of nature nor any way exprest and revealed as the Angel expresseth none in this place then the Command is said to come from absolute and uncontradicted dominion to try obedience There is a natural Law which lighteth every man that cometh into the World to choose the good in sundry cases of honesty and to refuse the evil this light is not a pure elementary fire but ignis culinaris as we say in Philosophy an impure smoaky flame which makes it apparent to the understanding what 's filthy to the soul as well as what 's noxious to the body And in those things where God is little known or at least little thought of humanity it self doth suggest the performance But because we rest not in the good of nature only as beasts do but aspire to a supernatural end and felicity therefore there is a supernatural Law to bring us to it Repent and believe and thou shalt be saved this is the Covenant of mercy and forgiveness which is made in Christ and the grace of God doth work in us a good will to those Divine duties that we do not frustrate our salvation Then thirdly the Sacraments of the New Testament are the Seals of the righteousness of faith as Sacraments they are Ceremonial Ordinances and are solemnly kept upon submission to the absolute Command of the Divine Authority but as faith is necessarily now knit unto them so they are a limb of the supernatural Law and are carefully observed not as Canons